Saturday, May 11, 2024

Florida Senate: Democrat Val Demings doesn’t say whether she will accept the results of election


Florida Democratic Rep. Val Demings, who’s seeking to unseat incumbent GOP Sen. Marco Rubio, didn’t say Tuesday throughout a televised debate whether she would accept the results of the Florida Senate election.

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Asked by Rick Christie, the government director of The Palm Beach Post who served as a panelist throughout the debate, whether she would “accept results of the 2022 election,” Demings didn’t present a transparent reply and informed a narrative about how her mom and father cherished voting.

“Let me start here if I may. My mother the maid and a janitor worked long hard days, but I can never remember a time when they did not vote,” she stated. “If their own car wasn’t working, they’d pay somebody a couple of dollars to take them to the polls. Why on earth would we try to stop them from voting? They were able to vote because of our democracy, the wonderful system of government that we have. No, it is not perfect, but our system of government is what allows us to be here tonight.”

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Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., did not say Tuesday night during the Florida Senate debate whether she would accept the results of the 2022 election in the Sunshine State.

Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., didn’t say Tuesday night time throughout the Florida Senate debate whether she would accept the results of the 2022 election in the Sunshine State.
(Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

“We have to do everything in our power to uphold the constitution, protect the rule of law, and protect our democracy, and protect each person’s – Republicans’, Democrats’, and independents’ – right to vote. That’s what I did as a police officer and a police chief. I took an oath that I would protect and serve, defend the constitution, not just for people who looked like me or the richest of the rich, but for all people,” she concluded.

“First of all, I don’t know who the rich are cause my dad was a bartender … and my mom was a janitor, so we have that in common,” Rubio responded. “I will tell you this much, never have I denied an election, ever. I’m not like Stacey Abrams in Georgia who denied her election, I’ve never denied an election. I think in Florida we have great election laws, but I think elections have to have rules. Congresswoman Demings supported this effort to have a federal takeover of elections. What would that look like? You can’t ask for ID. You have to ask for ID to get into her neighborhood where she lives and you have every right to have that, but you can’t ask for it when they vote?”

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Rubio defended election legal guidelines in Florida, saying they’re “rules that allow people to have confidence that their vote counted and their vote mattered.”

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Asked the identical query, Rubio stated he would “absolutely” help the consequence of the election as a result of of Florida’s “great” election legal guidelines.

“Sure, cause I’m gonna win,” Rubio stated. “I’m looking forward to supporting that, but yes, no matter what the outcome is I’ll support it because Florida has good laws. They’re not the crazy laws like they have in Pennsylvania and these other places.”

Florida Democratic Senate candidate Val Demings, left, and incumbent Florida GOP Senate candidate Marco Rubio, right.

Florida Democratic Senate candidate Val Demings, left, and incumbent Florida GOP Senate candidate Marco Rubio, proper.
(Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg, Gerardo Mora by way of Getty Images)

The debate was held at Palm Beach State College’s Lake Worth campus.

According to ballot of possible voters carried out by Spectrum News/Siena College in September, Rubio leads Demings 48% to 41%.

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 Fox News’ Power Rankings charges the Florida Senate race as “lean Republican.”

Rubio and Demings will go head-to-head in the Sunshine State’s November 8 midterm election.



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